Windows Azure is an open platform that will support both Microsoft and non-Microsoft languages and environments. Windows Azure welcomes third party tools and languages such as Eclipse, Ruby, PHP, and Python."

Huh... that's interesting. Unfortunately, the idea of a cloud OS creeps me out. I actually am a tester for a similar concept called G.HO.ST and I am more likely to trust my data with them than with Microsoft.

Wrong, Midori will be a cloud computing-based consumer OS using the Singularity kernel that is supposed to replace Windows in the future.

Wrong again. I've seen nothing convincing to suggest that Midori will be based in the cloud, though I have no doubt it'll move more towards better integration with the cloud.
Also, it won't use Singularity's kernel, rather have it's own kernel developed using the same managed code/microkernel approach. Singularity's kernel is too far from a usable Client kernel to be used in a Client OS project.

Oh, and it's not initially intended to replace Windows as such, it's currently nothing more than a research project, though it will probably replace Windows if it 'works' as such.

Wrong, Midori will be a cloud computing-based consumer OS using the Singularity kernel that is supposed to replace Windows in the future.

Wrong again. I've seen nothing convincing to suggest that Midori will be based in the cloud, though I have no doubt it'll move more towards better integration with the cloud.Also, it won't use Singularity's kernel, rather have it's own kernel developed using the same managed code/microkernel approach. Singularity's kernel is too far from a usable Client kernel to be used in a Client OS project.

Oh, and it's not initially intended to replace Windows as such, it's currently nothing more than a research project, though it will probably replace Windows if it 'works' as such.

We can't really say much about Midori, it's so secretive... all we know for sure is that it's simply a research project using the Singularity kernel. There's been speculation that it might replace Windows, but as Mary Jo Foley said in a post before, the earliest possibility of that happening is after Windows 8.

Wrong, Midori will be a cloud computing-based consumer OS using the Singularity kernel that is supposed to replace Windows in the future.

Disregard what i said I suck cocks.

I was under the assumption that this is what midori turned into as they were both cloud computing, also I had the thought that Midori was more or less of a Windows desktop so to say running on a cloud, but whatever.